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00:35
@NathanOliver I fear the asker may be frustrated about how to make the question clear. They might be interpreting my requests for clarification as excessive. Do I edit the question myself to offer a mcve including my presumptions about the rules and then ask them to confirm that my edit is correct?
00:50
@mickmackusa you could do an edit and drop a comment that if they feel it is too much then they can roll it back. If they are okay with it then it can all move forward.
 
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05:12
This question has already been asked and it has multiple answered questions. How to display value retrieved from column CMDB one such example is Excel VLOOKUP where the key is not in the first column
 
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13:49
Sigh...
A user somehow has a gold badge and reopened their nth duplicate question
did they bother looking at the target? Or even asking why it was closed? no, just a 'you clearly didn't understand' one-liner comment. Of course! It's my question so therefore anyone who wants to close it must not understand.
14:30
@TylerH Sir, wow its a 15 years old question, late then no one voted to close non programming questions, was this specific rule missing then?
Rules were a lot different back then
14:47
@TylerH I'm not sure how you conclude that 73,000 views and 53 votes in "no value." That is pretty much the definition of valuable.
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14:57
I don't believe the Q&A to be valuable. Almost everything about interview questions isn't, in my experience. And I don't believe a Q&A for proposing interview questions is any exception. Might even be worse than other interview-related materials.
that's peanuts for a 15 year old question that's also blatantly off-topic. Ask some older mods--typically they don't consider high views until its in the hundreds of thousands or millions.

There is also objectively no value for a question that is asking for "SharePoint interview question recommendations" on a programming Q&A site, even if it had 1 million views.
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Keeping this question would be a farce, to be frank
Notice it hasn't gotten any votes in 5 years, and beyond that, only 9 votes in the last 12 years. Maybe it was popular once, but not anymore. I'm certain the views would tell a similar story, if view count by age were something that SO tracked
(minus, of course, my downvote from today)
I can continue--it's also for a dead platform, WSS, which is 2007 to 2010-era SharePoint. Even its successor, SharePoint Foundation, only existed for SharePoint 2013. So it could only possibly be valuable to someone today if they're still running an on-prem SharePoint 2007 or 2010 free installation (on a max of Windows Server 2012 R2, btw--it won't install on newer versions) and are hiring for that job, and think to come looking on Stack Overflow for what kinds of questions to ask.
15:18
@TylerH Views might be a different thing - people often try to look up "interview questions". So, it's possible the question got more views than the votes it got over the years. But "interview questions" resources I've found to be usually bad to terrible quality. Occasionally there is an OK question among another 10-20. I've yet to find some resources about interview questions for developers that is good.
Hopefully no one is doing any of those things, let alone all of them. We certainly shouldn't encourage them to by keeping the question around.
@VLAZ That's probably because good interview questions for developers will, for the most part, not be development-related. Assessing their skills should primarily be done by reviewing their resume and checking their references, with maybe one or two general knowledge dev questions (or organically through a conversation with them), and the rest of the questions should be about how they are as a worker/employee/team player in general
"good interview questions for developers will, for the most part, not be development-related." correct.
Folks looking for 'list of good programmer interview questions' are the same kind of thinkers as folks who google how to fix their code and just blindly copy and paste the first thing they find from Stack Overflow
i don't quite understand how 53 votes on the question is a good reason to keep a collection of old dated no longer relevant answers that weren't on topic to begin with
 
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16:27
@RobertGoldwein, don't mind the SO Close Mafia, your question is legit. — hyankov Oct 1, 2017 at 7:32
 
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19:43
@TylerH to be fair, checking references is hard because a lot of companies apparently are disinclined to give negative reviews
20:12
@RyanM I don't know about you but I've never heard of putting an entire company as a reference.
I also don't see why a company would be afraid to negatively review a former employee if they were, well, a poor performer
I had a former teammate who quit with no notice on Thanksgiving Day a couple years ago, while he was in the middle of his on-call rotation. Never documented anything either. You can be sure he didn't put anyone here as a reference because we sure as hell would've thrown him under the bus if we got called
I wonder how he explained away working 4.5 years at his most recent company while providing zero references from it, wherever he is working now. That would be a red flag for me if I were looking at an applicant.
20:40
@TylerH the reason I've heard, in the US, is avoiding the possibility of defamation litigation
As for a person vs. a company, certainly if I were asked for a reference from someone I thought deserved a negative review, I would contact higher-ups on what to do
Put another way, there's absolutely zero incentive (beyond, like, general morals) to give an accurately negative review, rather than just declining to say anything, while there are potential risks (even if you'd win a lawsuit, you still have to defend it, which can be expensive and/or time-consuming)
Heck, I've even heard some companies are hesitant to even give specific feedback to candidates who didn't pass interviews, though the companies I've worked with have generally done so if asked - when I was a hiring manager, our recruiter had a policy of trying to give specific feedback if the candidate wanted it, and would solicit it from me/the team - which I very much supported
@RyanM That's probably only a case for rather famous people
Anyone else is not going to have enough clout/money to want to go to court with a company when the company likely has receipts
and definitely has more money than you
I'd expect the opposite. I doubt famous people would care about a negative reference given privately; they're already famous for whatever reason.
if anything, a famous person has less chance of winning and more chance of ending up paying the other side's legal fees
It doesn't cost that much to file a frivolous defamation suit; it costs far more to defend one, and you might be able to extract a nuisance settlement to make you go away

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